Interview with the Hero and
Heroine from Windswept Shores
Hello
everyone. My name is Janice Seagraves. I’m the author of Windswept Shores.
I’ve always
had a fascination with people stuck on a deserted island, using only their wits
to survive.
As a child I
was hooked on Gilligan’s island, later in Jr. High I read Robinson Caruso and wrote
as part of my homework assignment, but I loved it. When I was older I watched
the Survivor Shows, but only liked the ones where they were on an island. Then
I saw the movie Castaway, and more recently the series Lost, but became lost.
So I had the
idea of a couple struggling to survive on a deserted island, but it would also be
a wonderful back drop for a romance.
But then I
had to decide where the island was . . .
After
countless google searches and looking at maps, I finally decided on the Bahamas.
It’s another country but close to the U.S. just sixty miles off the Florida
coast with it three hundred odd island and cays, with only eighty of which are
inhabited, so I decided would be an easy place to get lost in.
With the
wild weather they sometimes have there it, the island and the weather itself
became almost a secondary character.
Actually the
title of my book comes from my musing about the weather: they must have some awful
windswept shores over there.
Windswept
Shores? Hmm, I like that.
I already
had the heroine, Megan’s personality down. I’m a California girl so she is one
too, except she’s from Anaheim. I had her figured out before I even started
writing. She’s forty-two, suffering from the after effects of a bad marriage
and not ready to trust a new man. Even though she had been a housewife most of
her married life, Megan had taken classes that helped her to figure out how to
survive on the island.
The hero,
Seth, was a little harder. I knew I wanted him to be almost a polar opposite to
the heroine. But warm, caring and fun. What better than a handsome Aussie
surfer? Once I got his accent down, his personality popped into existence.
“Say hello
to the nice people, Megan and Seth,” I said, turning to my living room where
Seth sat on my tan couch alongside Megan, who was working on something.
“G’day,”
Seth says with a thick Aussie accent. He’s six foot, one. His arm and chest
muscles strain against his Hawaiian shirt as he shifts position on the seat
cushions.
As Megan
looks up, light bounces off her bright red hair. “Oh, have we started already?”
“Yes we
have. What are you making there?” I point to the wicker held tightly in her
hands, as she carefully weaves a reed through.
“I’m making
you a basket.”
“You are?”
“Yes, I
noticed you have quite a collection on your coffee table. I thought I’d make
you something to hold it all.” Megan’s sea green eyes are bright with
amusement.
I glanced at
my messy coffee table with its assorted junk, feeling my cheeks heat. “Yeah,
maybe I should have cleaned up a bit more before I had you two come over.”
“Aw Jan, don’t
mind Megz. She would have made ya a basket anyway. She’s just got to keep her
hands busy.”
“True,”
Megan admitted, pulling another loop through.
“Oh, um,
thank you.” I glance at Megan then back to Seth. “So tell us how you both ended
up on the island.”
“I reckon
Megz, should go first.” Seth nodded toward the woman next to him. “She got
there before I did, after all.”
Megan looks
up from her basketry. “Well, where shall I start?”
“At the
beginning?” I suggested.
“No.” She
chuckled. “That would take too long.” Megan looks off for a moment her gaze haunted.
“The plane I and my husband were on had flown into a storm. Saint Elmo’s fire
danced along the plane’s wings and set the motors on fire. The plane went down.
We crashed into the ocean.” Glancing at the unfinished basket in her hand, she
paused a moment, blinking rapidly. “I’m the only one who made it out.”
“Then what
happened?” I asked gently.
“I spent three
days and two nights on a raft going up then down like a giant elevator.” She
sighed. “Long-long days and nights passed with no food and barely any drinking water,
except what I could capture in a mouthwash bottle in the bottom of the boat
from the rain. Finally I drifted ashore on a little island. I used the raft at
night like a bed and then for shelter when it rained. One day I woke up and it
was flat. But by then I had started picking up the luggage that came in on the
surf, finding things to make my life more tolerable. I also took on the heartrending job of
burying my fellow passenger when they washed up from the plane wreck.”
She smiled
at the man beside her. “That’s where I first meet Seth. I thought he was
another dead body, until he coughed and rolled over.”
Seth
chuckled. “Her scream woke me up.”
I glanced at
Seth. “How did you get there?”
Seth leaned
forward, elbows on knees, his dove gray eyes clouding over. “Oy, me mate Bill
and I were on his boat, the Dinki-Di, during a big squall that’s when she hit a
reef. I got thrown overboard and had to tread water until dawn. When I could
see, I lit out fer shore.”
“It was a
big storm,” Megan added. “A lot of stuff got washed on the beach next day.”
Seth hooked
a thumb pointing at his big chest. “Including yours truly.”
“He’s lucky
he passed out after he got to the beach. Any sooner and well . . .” she trailed
off with a shrug.
Seth’s
glance went to hers. “When I first lit eyes on Megz, I knew I wanted her.”
Megan ducks
her head, but I could see a smile.
“Maybe now
would be a good time to tell about your book?” I suggested.
“Orright.”
Seth grinned until his cheeks dimpled. “This time of the year most folks want
to go on holiday, so they can have a bit of fun in the sun.”
Megan added,
“Unfortunately that’s what Megan thought too.”
Blurb: The sole survivor of a plane crash, Megan is alone on a
deserted island in the Bahamas until she finds a nearly-drowned man washed up
on shore. Another survivor, this time from a boat wreck. With only meager
survival skills between them, will they survive and can they find love?
EXCERPT:
Breathing hard, she flicked a glance at the teal-colored sea. She'd thought a vacation to the Bahamas would be the perfect getaway, would be a solution to the problems she and Jonathan had faced. She'd been wrong—dead wrong. Tears of grief filled her eyes. The never-ending crash of the waves on the beach and the cries of the seagulls seemed to mock her with the reminder she was utterly alone.
She'd felt like a tiny speck of sand last night when a violent storm had swept across the island. It had made a mess of her meager campsite, which had taken all morning to fix, and had demolished her seaweed SOS sign. She'll have to recreate her SOS. Sighing, Megan trudged toward a pile of kelp. As she got closer, she saw a figure wearing blue jeans and a t-shirt. Her stomach lurched.
Oh, God, it’s another body washed up from the plane wreck. That would be number twelve. As always, she couldn't help but wonder if the next one would be Jonathan. He hadn’t been wearing jeans on the plane, so she knew she’d been spared seeing his corpse this time. Thank God. She approached the body with dread. Tightening her resolve, she knelt. Suddenly the "dead body" coughed and rolled over. With a scream, Megan jumped back. She clutched her chest and pressed a shaking hand to her mouth.
He’s alive!
Biting her lip, she stared down at the still-breathing man. His drenched t-shirt molded against his broad shoulders and well developed upper body. Short, golden brown hair stuck out in all directions.
Megan, get control of yourself. Don’t wet your pants the first time you finally see a living person. She got on her knees, plucked the seaweed from him and wiped the sand from his face. His day-old whiskers scratched her palm. Reddened skin stretched across both cheekbones and over the bridge of his nose. Her thumb caressed his parched full bottom lip.
She patted the side of his face. “Hey, are you okay?” That’s a dumb question.
He isn’t okay.
“Hmm?” Gray eyes fluttered open. He stared at her a long moment, frowning slightly. “G’day.”
“Hello there.” She hated the sound of her voice. It sounded rusty, unused.
Abruptly he rolled away from her to heave onto the sand, making a loud, ugly retching noise.
He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, then looked at her. “Sorry, mate, I swallowed too much sea.” His gaze went over her shoulder in the direction of the bonfire which crackled and popped not far from them. “Mite big for a barbie.”
Sitting back on her heels with her hands folded in her lap, Megan followed his gaze, then back to him. “My signal fire.”
“Signal for what?”
“Help.”
His accent intrigued her. Was he English or Australian?
“G’darn,” he looked around, “where the bloody hell am I?”
“Don’t know. There’s no one here to ask.” Megan shrugged helplessly, but couldn’t contain her curiosity. “Are you from England?”
“Naw,” he rubbed his eyes, “I hail from Sydney, but my port of call these days is Fort Lauderdale.” He blinked up at her. “You?”
Ah, he’s an Aussie. “I’m Megan Lorry, from Anaheim, California,” she said, barely loud enough to be heard above the sounds of the surf and the roar from the fire. “Are you a survivor of Air Bahamas flight 227, too?”
Windswept Shores at Pink Petal
Books: http://pinkpetalbooks.com/Windswept-Shores-Janice-Seagraves.html
Or Find Windswept Shores for the kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Windswept-Shores-ebook/dp/B003URROMW
14 comments:
Love the cover and premise of Windswept Shores, Janice. Can't wait to read. :)
I loved this book.
Hi Tina,
Thank you. I hope you enjoy reading Windswept as much as I enjoyed writing it. :)
Hi Liz,
Thank you so much.
Janice~
What fun researching this one must have been. Gret cover and excerpt.
I used to love to watch Gilligan's Island when I was a kid.
Big time Gilligan's Island as well. Couldn’t wait to get home from school to watch it.
Love getting to know you a little more and love the excerpt.
This sounds so good. I have it in my Kindle and can't wait to read it. Great interview.
I loved this book too. I'm a sucker for an Aussie accent, too.
Marika
Hi Jean,
Thank you and, yeah, lots and lots so of research. But I enjoyed every minute of it. :)
Hi Faith,
Me too. :)
Hi Shiela,
I'm glad I'm not the only one who remembers that show with found memories. :)
Hi Cara,
Oh, wow, I hope you enjoy reading Windswept. I had a great time writing it.
Hi Harlie,
Thank you. You just made my day. :)
Janice~
Oh, it's so good to see sexy Seth and Megan again, Janice!
And, as always, I love that cover. So gorgeous!
Hi Vastine,
I'm so glad you like my book and book cover. *wink*
Janice~
Sounds like a winner, Janice! Best of luck with your release.
~Adele
Hi Adele,
Thank you. :)
Janice~
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